Peoples of the Covenants: Evangelical Theology
and the Plurality of the Covenants in Scripture
Tom Greggs
University of Aberdeen
I.
Engagement in inter-faith dialogue is never an
easy task. It is born of difference, particularity
and otherness to another who inevitably faces the
same or similar concerns and questions as oneself.
For evangelical Christians, engaging in inter-faith
dialogue is more difficult than it is for many
Christians. Following Bebbington's classical fourfold
definition of evangelicalism,[1] as well as being
crucicentric (focusing theology on the atoning death
of Jesus Christ) and activist (responding to that
death in works of faith), evangelicalism is marked
from other forms of Christian spirituality by its
Biblicism (seeing Scripture as the final authority in
all matters of faith and practice) and its
conversionism (emphasizing the decision of faith and
seeking the conversion of others to
Christianity).[2] There is, therefore,
for evangelicalism, a double exclusivity which can
serve to undermine the potential for inter-faith
engagement: the first of these revolves around
revelation, with the Christian Scriptures being seen
as God's final and absolute authoritative word to
humanity; the second revolves around issues
concerning salvation and the need for response to
God's grace in the act of conversion.[3] For
evangelicalism, there is an emphatic insistence on
the plain sense of Jesus' claim 'I am the way, the
truth and the life', and this is expressed in terms
of attending to the high authority of the Christian
Scriptures and to a life which seeks to be in
personal relationship with Christ. It is this
characterization which provides evangelicalism's
identity as a trans-denominational movement, a
movement focused on the uniqueness of Jesus Christ's
atoning death, as learned about in Scripture, and as
responded to by conversion.
However, if evangelicalism is to take its claim to
Biblicism seriously, there is a need to attend to
all of the Bible, including those places in
which one can identify some of the complexities found
in the body of Scripture.[4] A number of such texts
revolve around the place of the religious other
within Scripture. While there are places in which
there are clear binary separations of people
(prophets of Baal do not seem to be prophets of the
Lord!), there are other places in which it seems
clear that God works outside of the two-fold
classification of insiders and outsiders to His
promise which often underpins evangelical approaches
to the text.[5] These narratives
involve the various Samaritans and pagans with whom
Jesus engages, but also figures such as Rahab,
Melchizedek, Jethro and Ruth.[6] Taking Biblicism
seriously in these texts seems to demand questions of
the traditionally-articulated evangelical attitude to
the way in which God works with His people —usually
expressed as only being a relationship with
Christians and (in most evangelical articulations)
with Jews. The text demands a more complex reading,
and to be genuinely Biblicist involves attending to
these. Crucially, while these themes are very much
contemporary for a post-9/11 world, these
complexifying elements do not arise external to the
tradition, but are rather to be found through the
plain sense of the texts of the Bible, whose unique
status as the revelation of God must be affirmed by
evangelical Christians. Recognizing the deep wealth
of scriptural wisdom means that to be truly biblical
(even in the plain sense) can never involve the
hermeneutical naïveté of stating, '[t]he Bible said
it, I believe it, that settles it.'[7] There is a
glorious complexity to the God of all the universe—so
infinite that He is best honoured by silence—and it
should not be a surprise to evangelicals that there
is a glorious complexity to the Word of that
God.[8] Sure, the Bible
contains the simple message of God's love and
covenant with His people, but it also contains a
depth of wisdom which grows ever deeper the further
it is furrowed. As Richard Hays puts it, evangelical
theologians must have the
willingness to grapple with actual close readings
of the biblical texts and to acknowledge the
presence of tensions and perplexities that
stimulate careful scholarly study and
interpretation. To treat the Bible's complexity
with this sort of alert respect is to grant it
more, not less, authority than those
interpreters who superimpose a priori
propositional grids upon it ... To acknowledge such
complexities in both world and Scripture is not to
be less evangelical, but to insist that the good
news with which we are entrusted must truthfully
acknowledge our created and fallen human condition
and the historically contingent manner in which God
has chosen to reveal himself to us.[9]
Furthermore, evangelical reading of
Scripture is not engagement with a static, dusty
textbook, but a recognition of the living and active
Word of God. This determines that for evangelicals,
the Bible should not be read simply as a means of
confirming pre-decided norms, but should be read as a
means of facilitating God's personal encounters with
His people to whom He still speaks by His Word and
His Spirit. As Richard Briggs puts it:
What is the telos (goal, purpose, end) of
evangelical reading of Scripture? It is
attentiveness to the God mysteriously present in
Scripture. It is discipleship illumined by this
inspired text in incomparable ways, though of
course in the midst of multiple other
illuminations. It is transformation before the
whole canon received as God's providential ordering
of many and various witnesses to his Word, the same
'many and various' voices which we saw brought
together (mysteriously) in Christ in Hebrews
1:1–2.[10]
In the age of post-Christendom in which
our neighbours (whom Christ in Scripture calls us to
love as ourselves) are people of other faiths and
none, the true evangelical is to seek from the Bible
God's purpose for lives of discipleship in this
generation. Again, to quote Hays: 'If we believe that
the word of God is living and active, sharper than
any two-edged sword (Heb. 4:12), we should expect our
encounter with that living word to challenge and
change us.'[11] Faced with the
contemporary, political need for peace within our
world between people of different creeds, it is the
task of the evangelical theologian to seek for the
'deep readings' of the Scriptures which are so
important and central to the life of evangelical
faith:[12] while the
conversionist impetus will undoubtedly remain within
the evangelical psyche, the theologian must also
attend to how properly to relate the conversionist
impetus with an activist desire for the peace of the
city. Central to this task is the engagement with
these contemporary issues in a manner which is
genuinely evangelical, speaking from within
the tradition in order to shape and reform its
engagement with the Bible, God and the world. Put
sharply the question is this: how can we be
evangelical and open to God's presence with and
promises for other people? This article seeks to
offer just one potential example of such a theology.
As an evangelical who has wrestled with these
themes, the practice of Scriptural Reasoning has
facilitated a greater depth in the reading of my own
Scriptures in light of reading with others. Such
readings have made me have to question the
presumptions I have brought to the text in light of
more genuinely plain sense readings of those for whom
the Christian Bible is not their Scripture. As an
evangelical theologian, this has determined the need
to ask questions both of the legitimacy of meeting
with members of other faith communities to dialogue
with them, and of the hermeneutics involved in
learning more of oneself and one's Scriptures in
light of conversations with the other.[13] One
such place in which this learning has taken place has
been with regards to God's covenants (plural) of
grace found in the Bible.[14]
In this article, I wish to address these themes by
examining the nature of covenant and covenants in
Scripture, and to do this by entering into dialogue
with the Swiss theologian, Karl Barth. The article
will, then, offer a Scriptural Reasoning-style
theological reading of the Ishmael and Abraham
narratives around the theme of covenant and promise,
finally drawing some tentative conclusions for
evangelical attitudes to Islam.
II.
There is much discussion in theology about God's
covenant (singular) with humanity. When spoken of in
the singular, covenant involves God's relational
dealings with humanity, seen supremely in the person
of Jesus Christ—for Christians, God's full and
complete covenant with humanity in whom all other
covenants have their origin, meaning and end. Indeed,
were one to insist on a central motif for the
twentieth century's greatest theologian, Karl Barth,
it would no doubt have to be God's covenant of grace
with humanity in Jesus Christ—a theme which occurs at
every point in his Church Dogmatics. This is
hardly surprising when one considers that the word
covenant (berit in Hebrew or diatheke
in Greek)[15] occurs in 260 verses
in the Hebrew Bible, and a further 60 verses in the
New Testament. Not all of these uses of the word
describe the relationship between humanity and God,
as in some uses the covenant is between human beings.
However, there are a range of covenants in the Bible
between God and humans. Within the Hebrew Bible, it
is possible to identify a number of such discrete
covenants with humanity, many involving differing
'reaches' of God (and levels of exclusivity). Among a
notable number of others, these are sometimes
identified as the Noahide, Abrahamic, Sinaitic,
Davidic, and the new Ezekelic covenants.[16]
Systematic theology has recognized (if only in
passing) this range of covenants. Indeed, Karl Barth,
for whom the theme of covenant is so important, on
eight different occasions points to the plurality of
covenants in Scriptures, beyond the simple Christian
recognition of the old and the new covenant.[17] Barth
writes clearly and emphatically: 'The one covenant
achieves historical form in the making of a series
of covenants.[18] For Barth, these
covenants are not separate or distinct from the
perspective of God, but are rather historical
expressions of the one covenant—Jesus Christ. In
this, Barth continues: 'This covenant is fulfilled,
however, in the existence of the one Jesus
Christ'.[19] Although Jesus Christ
is the one covenant God for humanity, this does not
determine that there is not historical particularity
and variance in the different historical
instantiations of covenant before Jesus' historical
becoming flesh. This particularity and
distinctiveness is not, furthermore, suspended by
Christ's incarnation for Barth:
Jesus Christ is already the content and theme of
this prehistory, of the Old Testament covenant. As
prehistory, as revelation in expectation, the Old
Testament covenant is characterised by its division
into several covenants side by side, equipped with
the same marks, even with the marks of the same
uniqueness. Before the Sinaitic covenant we
admittedly find the covenant with Abraham
underlying the election of Israel, and again,
before the Abrahamic covenant, the covenant with
Noah, in which the particular covenant with Israel,
even before it became an event, is already carried
beyond its particularity and raised to
universality. So, although it is already a reality
from that early beginning, Israel's election is a
present reality. In Deuteronomy we find that the
covenant is to some extent a lasting ordinance,
under which the Israel of the present stands,
although it is still based upon the free love and
lordship of God.[20]
According to Barth, and surely the
tradition of God's immutability, the promises of God
last forever, and thus must include the present
post-resurrection world.
Given theology's propensity to speak in terms of
'the' covenant, or 'the old' and 'the new' covenant,
it is appropriate for Barth to ask: 'Which of these
covenants is the covenant intended by the Old
Testament, and meant to be understood and attested as
the original, central and true covenant?'[21]
However, Barth's answer is apposite for the biblical
texts: 'An answer in terms of the Old Testament texts
themselves can only be to the effect that each one is
in its own place and in its own way. For it is always
the one covenant with the same direction and
order.'[22] The attestation of
Scripture to the concrete plurality of covenants
requires recognition. One could put this otherwise:
if Jesus Christ is the primary objectivity of God's
revelation, then in the various concrete covenants of
God with creation, one can detect the secondary
objectivity of God's revelation in concrete
historical settings in which the covenant takes
historical and contextual form.[23] Crucially,
however, these contextual instantiations of God's
covenant are not passing in nature, but are preserved
owing to the nature of God, and their being
God's promises. Barth helpfully states,
discussing the nature of God as patient:
Does not the whole story of God's covenant with
man, the covenant with Abraham, and the covenant at
Sinai, and everything that happens in connexion
with them—above all does not the fulfilment of all
the promises of all these covenants in Jesus
Christ, depend upon the fact that this covenant
with Noah was concluded and kept and will always be
faithfully kept? Does not the grace and mercy of
God depend upon the fact that there is also a
patience of God, that He grants space to the sinful
creature, thus giving Himself space further to
speak and act with it?[24]
Although these covenants are promised in
Jesus Christ, the integrity and veracity of them for
those to whom they are promised remains. Because they
are covenants in Jesus Christ, the faithful mercy and
patience of God determines that they are preserved
for all of those to whom they are promised. Those
standing under the covenants to Abraham, Moses and
(even) Noah remain under such promises of God,
since they are the very promises of God, and (for the
perspective of Christian theology) grounded in the
very nature and person of God as Jesus
Christ.[25]
Barth clearly affirms and addresses the plurality
of covenants in Scripture, and their continued
significance. However, this theme hardly makes a real
impact in his theology. For Barth, there are 27
mentions of covenants (in the plural) in his corpus,
including mentions when he addresses simply 'old and
new covenants', compared to 3,278 uses of the word
'covenant' (in the singular). While he
affirms—rightly for evangelical theology—that all
instantiations of covenant are instantiations of the
one covenant of God with humanity in Jesus Christ, it
must surely be admitted that (given the various ways
in which covenants appear in Scripture) he does not
give due attention to the significance, even if only
at the level of secondary objectivity, of there being
a plurality of historical covenants, despite what he
says about the plurality of covenants. The
particularity and variance of God's dealings with his
peoples does not receive discussion, and the
particularity of each of the covenants (while
affirmed by Barth) comes simply to be subsumed in
each covenant being part of God's one full and
complete covenant in Jesus.
While certainly Christian (and most especially
evangelical) theologians must make the centrality of
Jesus Christ key to all discussion of the univocity
of Scripture, to attend to Scripture and to take
Scripture seriously involves recognizing the
particular way in which God's covenant with humanity
in Christ is established in concrete history. These
instantiations of covenant need not, moreover,
undermine God's single word to humanity—Jesus—but may
be understood as enhypostatic subsistences of God's
one eternal covenant with humanity in
history.[26] To measure Barth by
his own yardstick through judging him by Scripture,
it is surely necessary to say that the more
evangelical approach to these themes involves
attesting the multiplicity of covenants that confront
the faithful reader of the Christian texts.
Theologians (and to their credit often evangelical
ones) have often addressed these themes with regards
to Israel. In the next section of this article,
however, I wish to attend to the covenanting promise
of God with Ishmael; for God's promises to Abraham
are not simply worked out through Isaac, but also
through his other son. For Ishmael and his
descendants, the promise of God is sure, and God's
patience endures: for the promises are made by the
one and same God, the God of Jesus Christ.
Evangelical theologians cannot simply be selective
with regards to the promises made in Scripture, but
must surely give Scripture the true power and
authority to address the reader and speak to her. As
well as the Judaeo-Christian tradition of Ishmael
being the father of a powerful nation, in The
Tales of the Prophet, which is the first part of
Mohammad's biography, Ishmael is understood not only
to be the father of the Arab nations but also the
father of the greater Ummah of Muslim people.
Attending to the texts around the promises made to
him may enable evangelical Christians to see God's
purposes worked outwith the bounds of the Christian
(or even evangelical) community.
III.
The figure of Ishmael and the stories surrounding
him in the Hebrew Bible are ambiguous. Clearly, he is
a son of Abraham, who is circumcised (Gen. 17.23
& 25) and thereby a member of God's covenant
people: 'So shall my covenant be in your flesh
an everlasting covenant' (emphasis added). As flesh
from Abraham's flesh and as a circumcised male,
Ishmael is also a fulfilment of God's promise to
Abraham. Promises are also made, on various
occasions, to Hagar and Ishmael:[27]
10 The angel of the LORD also said to
her, 'I will so greatly multiply your offspring
that they cannot be counted for multitude.'
11 And the angel of the LORD said to
her, 'Now you have conceived and shall bear a son;
you shall call him Ishmael, for the LORD has given
heed to your affliction.' (Gen. 16.10-11)
And: 'As for Ishmael, I have heard you;
I will bless him and make him fruitful and
exceedingly numerous; he shall be the father of
twelve princes, and I will make him a great nation.'
(Gen. 17.20). These promises are repeated even when
it seems that Ishmael may die of thirst, having been
turned out of his father's home:
And God heard the voice of the boy; and the angel
of God called to Hagar from heaven, and said to
her, 'What troubles you, Hagar? Do not be afraid;
for God has heard the voice of the boy where he is.
18 Come, lift up the boy and hold him
fast with your hand, for I will make a great nation
of him.' 19 Then God opened her eyes and
she saw a well of water. She went, and filled the
skin with water, and gave the boy a drink.
20 God was with the boy, and he grew up.
(Gen. 21.17-20)
Promises are not simply made to Hagar
but also to Abraham regarding his first born son: 'As
for the son of the slave woman, I will make a nation
of him also, because he is your offspring' (Gen.
21.13). However, it is also clear that Ishmael is not
(from the perspective of the biblical narrative) the
primary choice for God's covenant. The narrative with
Sarah makes this clear, and it is put emphatically by
God thus: after the promise of Ishmael's blessing
(Gen. 17.20), God states, 'But my covenant I will
establish with Isaac, whom Sarah shall bear to you at
this season next year' (v. 21).[28]
It may seem strange, therefore, given the verse on
berit (covenant) being established with Isaac
(and by implication not Ishmael) to claim that these
promises to Ishmael and Hagar are covenants as well.
Gen. 17.21 is, indeed, a troubling verse,[29]
because God has also just covenanted with Abraham
that Ishmael shall be blessed. Furthermore, God has
offered his everlasting covenant with all of
Abraham's descendants. Thus, it seems that God says
something (in verses 20 and 21) like 'I make a
covenant with Ishmael, but my covenant shall be
established with Isaac'. Although the word
berit is not used for Ishmael, it is difficult
to see what else the repeated promises can be.
Covenant is not simply that which takes place only
when the word is cited (nor indeed, since the word is
also used of human treaties): to say that would mean
that theology would be required to say that Jesus is
God's covenant only with regard to the places in
which he is spoken of as diatheke. We do well
here to note van Seeters' argument that covenant in
the Abrahamic material follows 'a divine oath of
promise rather than the so-called treaty pattern of
Deuteronomy.'[30] Issues (perhaps
important to the concerns of evangelicals outside the
Reformed tradition) such as the contingency of
promise on the basis of response do not appear in the
text. The promises made to Ishmael are certainly
divine oaths. It is the very nature of God's
inability to break such oaths (because of his patient
faithfulness) that is the essence of God's covenant
to humanity.[31] Even if the text does
not use berit of the promises to Ishmael, there can
be little doubt that they are indeed divine covenants
with him and his offspring. What, then, is the
significance of these promises to Ishmael?
Firstly, these divine covenants arise out of the
great and everlasting covenant made with Abraham.
That this covenant is made with Abraham and his
descendants, rather than simply Isaac and his, is of
significance for the plain sense of the texts. There
is a clear level of continuity even for the son who
is not chosen by his father. If evangelicals are to
take Scripture seriously, we must ask why it is that
the covenant is not simply made with Isaac's
offspring, but with Abraham's, and what the
significance of all of Abraham's flesh
entering into God's covenant is. The promise is for
Abraham's and not simply Isaac's descendants.
It is hardly as if God is unaware of the added child
of Abraham, and Ishmael is after all circumcised as
Abraham enters into his covenant. Indeed, this is a
point which is repeated on three occasions, at
chapter 17, verses 23, 25 and 26. Ishmael is clearly
a member of God's covenant with Abraham.[32]
Secondly, that there is continuity with Abraham
and Abraham's covenant does not mean that there is
not differentiation and particularity. A separate
promise is given to Ishmael to that of Isaac. That
there are many covenants in Scripture should surely
remind the Christian theologian that God does not
operate in the world in a monotonous or monochrome
manner. There is a feast of variety and particularity
in God's dealing with all of His peoples in history.
Even if there is a hierarchy in terms of the promises
that God makes, as seems to be here with the
preference of Isaac over Ishmael (and as is certainly
the case for evangelical theologians with regard to
God's covenant in Jesus Christ), this does not mean
that God does not make promises and involve Himself
with others. As the providential Lord over all of
creation, this is hardly anything that might be
unexpected. In the case of Ishmael, there are
glorious and specific promises which are made that
are different to those made to Isaac. Reading the
stories of these two brothers, evangelicals must be
challenged to recognize the manner in which God works
with others who seem to be outside the 'chosen' (or a
particular chosen) people, and we must break down
fences with those different to ourselves in order to
realize God is on the other side already ahead of us.
This involves no removal of commitment to the
heritage of evangelical faith (just as a promise is
still made directly to Isaac which is distinct to
that made to Ishmael), but it should surely warn us
against the pernicious evangelical tendency to
confine God's ways with the world simply to ways with
evangelical communities. Certainly, the latter
(evangelical communities) are true ways in which God
relates to His people, but God—as the one Lord and
the only God of all of the world—has other people
with whom He operates differently as well.[33] The
promise to Ishmael does not undermine the specificity
and specialness of the promise to Isaac, but neither
does the covenant with Isaac undo the distinctive
promise to Ishmael. They stand in a non-competitive
relationship, which is hardly surprising for a God
who—as love—has an infinite amount of love from which
to bestow His grace on people. Both covenants are
separate and different, but both are the promises of
God and mark His ways with His specific and
distinctive peoples. When we move past, which we
must, notions of seeing God as the 'biggest thing in
the world' (which may be the definition of an idol,
but never the Lord), the capacity to see God as an
object of knowledge to know is denied, and we are
able to recognize (as evangelical personalism and
emphasis on individual relationship with God
traditionally has done) that God is the Holy One to
whom we relate. Just as human beings do not simply
know each other in exactly the same way, but relate
differently to different people, so too God's
relations with His people do not need to be the same,
but are differentiated, as is the case with Isaac and
Ishmael.[34] The story of Ishmael
demonstrates, moreover, that this differentiation is
not binary, in terms of saved-damned or
elected-rejected: it is a differentiated
positive relationship of God to these
different children of Abraham.[35]
That Ishmael relates to God is, thirdly and
furthermore, made exceptionally clear in the text:
God, the Lord, is clearly the God of Ishmael as much
as He is the God of Isaac. Genesis makes this
abundantly evident (21.20): 'God was with the boy,
and he grew up'. Certainly, he fights with his
brother (though not so much that he is not involved
in Abraham's burial in Gen. 25.9): God says, 'He
shall be a wild ass of a man, with his hand against
everyone, and everyone's hand against him; and he
shall live at odds with all his kin' (Gen. 16.12).
However, we cannot and should not confuse enmity with
his kin (which, given the manner in which he is cast
out for the 'favoured' child Isaac, is perhaps
entirely understandable) with enmity with God. That
he does not get on with his kin does not mean that
God is not his God, with whom he is in relationship.
To seek to relate this point to the present
situation, similarly, evangelicals today should not
confuse the tensions that exist between Islam and
Christianity as in any way indicative of a lack of
relationship with God for Muslims. The children of
Abraham not getting along together means neither that
they are not children of Abraham, nor that they are
not in a relationship of promise with God. The Isaac
and Ishmael stories make that overtly clear.
IV.
If evangelicals are to take the whole of Scripture
seriously, then Ishmael is a figure that they have to
consider. The living and active Word of God with its
authority in all matters of faith cannot simply be
cast aside with the excuse of historical
contextualization which is not relevant to present:
this is surely the very thing evangelicals fear in
liberal approaches to the Scriptures. The history
that follows these Scriptures recounts how the God of
all history has fulfilled his promise to Ishmael in
the people of Islam. This is not the place in which
to discuss issues of supersession, nor the place to
discuss the veracity of truth claims or the adequacy
of response for Muslim people. On these issues, there
will always be family tensions, as there were between
the patriarchs, Isaac and Ishmael. But these tensions
do not mean that Ishmael and his descendants have not
received the promise of God, who in His patience,
mercy and faithfulness endures. Jesus' reminder
regarding Zacchaeus should be a reminder for
evangelicals regarding Ishmael: 'he too is a son of
Abraham' (Lk. 19:9).
The current article has done little more than
point to the existence in Scripture of a plurality of
covenants, which evangelicals especially need to take
seriously; and has focused particularly on God's
promises regarding Ishmael. The purpose has not been
to unpack what the implications of these promises
might be for contemporary evangelicalism's engagement
with and understanding of Islam. On that we are at
best only at the very beginning of the beginning, and
there remains a huge amount of work to be done. The
attempt has been made only to point to one place in
the Scriptural account which potentially asks
evangelicals for some degree of patient and humble
complexifying of their account of the covenanting
activity of God with his people in relation to
interpretation of the Holy Bible. Space does not
allow a thorough examination of what the precise
nature of the covenant might be, nor what the
outworkings of this interpretation of the Ishmael
narratives might mean for evangelicals in relation to
the way in which they understand salvation, prophecy,
providence or revelation: for issues of this kind,
much further enquiry and engagement would be
required. For now, the following provisional
conclusions will have to suffice in the hope that
they might engender humility, carefulness and future
engagement with the theological and practical
implications that arise from theological exegesis of
the Ishmael narratives.
Evangelicals would do well to remember that
Christians, too, are not the honoured chosen heirs,
born of Sarah, but are adopted children in the
family, spiritual heirs to Abraham without being
physical ones.[36] Furthermore, there is
the need to realize that we are adopted into a family
that does not have an only son, but another heir to
whom an enduring promise is given.[37] Such a reminder
may help to change attitudes to Islam's perceived
supersession of Christianity: Islam is not simply a
newer religion than Christianity but has its basis on
a much older promise—a promise made to Abraham and
traced, not through Isaac, but through Ishmael.
Evangelicals do, after all, tend make a similar move
with regards to Judaism: as evangelicals, we tend not
to question the promise God made in relation to
Israel for rabbinical Judaism as opposed to templic
Judaism, despite significant differences in religious
practice. It may well be time to attend to God's
three families who have arisen from one great promise
to Abraham—a great promise which for Christians is a
prefigurement of Jesus Christ, and which has its
truth in Him; a promise which continues in God's
faithfulness; and a promise made in Scripture,
which—as evangelicals especially—we cannot ignore. In
attending theologically to the full breadth and depth
of such a promise in Scripture, we have the
possibility of becoming more (and not less)
evangelical.
Notes
[1] See David Bebbington,
Evangelicalism in Modern Britain: A History from
the 1730s to the 1980s (London: Unwin Hyman,
1989).
[2] Larsen also offers a
helpful characterization of evangelicalism,
effectively adding to Bebbington's definition the
condition that these are held in conjunction with
orthodox protestant theology. See Larsen, 'Defining
and locating evangelicalism', in Larsen and Treier
(eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Evangelical
Theology (Cambridge: CUP, 2007). For further
discussion of issues surrounding evangelical
identity, see S. J. Grenz, Revisioning Evangelical
Theology: A Fresh Agenda for the 21st Century,
Downers Grove: IVP, 1993, esp. ch. 2.
[3] These concerns clearly
place evangelical theology in a different position
than liberal theologies, such as that of John Hick.
See, for example, his God and the Universe of
Faiths: Essays in the Philosophy of Religion
(London: Macmillan, 1973); God Has Many Names:
Britain's New Religious Pluralism (London:
Macmillan, 1980); Problems of Religious
Pluralism (London: Macmillan, 1985); and An
Interpretation of Religion: Human Responses to the
Transcendent (London: Macmillan, 1989). However,
it also puts evangelical theology in a different
position than tradition-based theologies, which
emphasise the role of tradition in theology; for
these, there is more opportunity to 'change' or
(better) 'develop' the theological stance of their
churches, as is perhaps the case with Vatican II's
Lux Mundi.
[4] The evangelical propensity
towards selective reading of texts is marked: while
it is outwith the confines of this article, it is
notable how little attention is paid, for example, to
texts regarding money, despite the prolific number of
them within the body of Scripture.
[5] On such an approach, see,
for example, Nigel M. de S. Cameron, 'Universalism
and the Logic of Revelation', in The Best in
Theology Vol. 3, ed. J. I. Packer (Carol Stream,
Illinois: Christianity Today, Inc., 1989), esp. pp.
153 and 166; and David Fergusson, 'Eschatology', in
The Cambridge Companion to Christian Doctrine,
ed. Colin E. Gunton (Cambridge: CUP, 1997), p.
241.
[6] On this theme, see Gerald
O'Collins, Salvation for All: God's Other
Peoples (Oxford, OUP, 2008).
[7] Richard Hays cites this as
a worrying bumper sticker he has seen around America.
See Richard B. Hays, 'Postscript: Seeking a Centred,
Generous Orthodoxy' in Greggs (ed.) New
Perspectives for Evangelical Theology: Engaging God,
Scripture and the World (London: Routledge), p.
217.
[8] Evangelicals recognise
this complexity which arises from the plain sense in
such disputes over dispensationalism and the like:
the multivocity of Scripture determines that the
stronger the plain sense reading, the greater the
level of hermeneutical or theological sophistication
needed to allow that plain sense to stand.
[9] Hays, 'Postscript', p.
217. See further, Richard Briggs, 'The Bible before
us: Evangelical Possibilities for Taking Scripture
Seriously', in Greggs, New Perspectives for
Evangelical Theology.
[10] Briggs, 'The Bible
Before Us', p. 26.
[11] Hays, 'Postscript', p.
217.
[12] The term 'deep reading'
is borrowed from Quash. 'Deep Calls to Deep: Reading
Scripture in a Multi-Faith Society', in
Remembering Our Future: Explorations in Deep
Church, Bretherton and Walker (eds.) (Milton
Keynes: Paternoster, 2007)
[13] These are themes I have
developed in a little more detail elsewhere. See my
article, 'Legitimizing and Necessitating Inter-faith
Dialogue: The Dynamics of Inter-faith for Individual
Faith Communities', International Journal of Public
Theology 4:2, 2010.
[14] By covenants in the
plural is meant such covenants as the Noahide,
Davidic and Abrahamic covenants (to name but three),
which each have different foci and 'reaches'. For a
good overview of covenant and covenants in scriptural
texts, see W. J. Dumbrell, Covenant and Creation:
A Theology of the Old Testament Covenants
(Carlisle: Paternoster, 1997); and Steven L.
McKenzie, Covenant (St. Louis: Chalice, 2000),
esp. pp. 4-7. In this article, the scope of
discussion is only covenants between God and
humanity. For covenants between humans and nations,
etc., see D. J. McCarthy, Old Testament Covenants:
A Survey of Current Options (Oxford: Blackwell,
1973), ch. 4.
[15] For an examination of
the philology of berit, see D. J. McCarthy,
Old Testament Covenants: A Survey of Current
Options (Oxford: Blackwell, 1973).
[16] For a presentation of
the range of covenants within the Bible, see Steven
L. McKenzie, Covenant (St. Louis: Chalice,
2000); and W. J. Dumbrell, Covenant and Creation:
A Theology of the Old Testament Covenants
(Carlisle: Paternoster, 1997)
[17] The purpose of this
paper is not to examine supersessionist implications
of this, nor to examine the relationship between
these two covenants; these issues require sensitive
engagement beyond the scope of the present piece.
[18] Barth, Karl, Learning
Jesus Christ through the Heidelberg Catechism
(Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans, 1964), p. 52,
emphasis added.
[19] Barth, Learning Jesus
Christ.
[20] Karl Barth, Church
Dogmatics (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 1956-75),
I/2, pp. 81-2, emphasis added. (Hereafter Church
Dogmatics is cited by volume and part only.)
Barth goes on in this section to recognize the
covenant discussed in Jeremiah, Ezekiel and
Deutero-Isaiah, as well as the covenant with David
and Levi.
[21] I/2, p. 82.
[22] I/2, p. 82.
[23] On primary and secondary
objectivity, see Charles Marsh, Reclaiming
Dietrich Bonhoeffer: The Promise of His Theology
(Oxford: OUP, 1994), pp. 31-3.
[24] II/1, p. 413.
[25] Indeed, Barth discusses
the third use of the law under the covenants made to
Israel: 'The Church lives by the covenants made
between God and Israel. Again and again new
agreements and mutual obligations are made between
God and the men of this people. The number of them
shows how unilaterally they have been kept. And if
there is a remarkable preponderance of divine
warnings at the very making of them, even more so
does their fulfilment seem to consist almost
regularly and entirely in the occurrence of the
corresponding penal judgments. The Church recognises
the pure and full comfort of the one covenant of
grace kept by man as by God. But what does it
recognise in it but the meaning and the determined
purpose of the many covenants made with Israel? The
Church lives by the "lawgiving" which took place in
Israel, regulating the life of the people with a view
to the holiness required by the holiness of its Lord.
The law of the Church is the faith which it has been
given in the Lord by whose holiness the holiness of
His people is created. Yet when it is obedient in
this faith, it is doing no more than what is really
required by Israel's Law. The Church lives by the
"worship" that is permitted and commanded Israel. The
permission and the commandment consist in the
priestly and sacrificial order which is given to the
people and embraces its whole life. The Church
exercises worship in spirit and in truth in view of
the eternal High Priest and His sacrifice offered
once for all. But it is the worship permitted and
commanded Israel which is fulfilled in this way. The
Church lives by the "promises" given to Israel
according to which the people is to be blessed and
numerous, to possess the land, to be rich and
powerful and happy under its king, and finally to see
all peoples united in Zion' (II/2, p. 203).
[26] Webster discusses the
ethical implications of Barth's an-/en-hypostasis
distinction. I am wishing here to say something akin
to what Webster says about Christ's humanity with
regards to the covenant: because God's covenant with
humanity is real, reality is given to all other
covenants of God with humanity. Cf. J. Webster,
Barth's Moral Theology: Human Action in Barth's
Thought. (Edinburgh: T &T Clark, 1998), pp.
88ff. On an-/en-hypostasis, see I/2, pp. 162ff., 216
(anhypostasis only); & IV/2, pp. 44-50.
See also, Eberhard Jüngel, God's Being Is in
Becoming (Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 2001), pp.
96f.
[27] For an excellent and
subtle discussion of texts surrounding Ishmael, and
particularly surrounding Hagar, see Steven Kepnes,
'Hagar and Esau: From Others to Sisters and Brothers'
in Peter Ochs and William Stacy Johnson, Crisis,
Call, and Leadership in the Abrahamic Traditions
(New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009), pp. 31-46.
[28] It is equally possible
to translate the 'but' in this sentence as 'and', and
certain translations do this. While this may seem to
make the statement less exclusivist, the force of the
exclusion is the statement about Isaac and Sarah,
rather than which connective is inserted in the
English.
[29] This may explain why
there is remarkably little on this verse in either
the tradition or in contemporary biblical
scholarship.
[30] John van Seeters,
Abraham in History and Tradition (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1975).
[31] Barth certainly sees
God's promise to Hagar about Ishmael as arising out
of His election: 'Even its [the covenant's] rejected
members (just because of the separation which
excludes them) are not forsaken, but after, as
before, share in the special care and guidance of the
electing God' (II/2, p. 217). Barth is stating here
that there is a covenant for those outside the
covenant.
[32] Thus one might note
that, if evangelicals are to affirm something like a
(to my mind entirely false, erroneous and unbiblical)
differentiation between covenants fulfilled in Jesus
Christ and those not fulfilled in Jesus Christ (but
are still promises of God), it is worth their
remembering that Ishmael's promises are an outworking
of the covenant with Abraham, a covenant which cannot
but be seen to be a part of the one covenant of God
in Jesus Christ.
[33] Evangelicals must be
careful of the dangerous narrowing of God's salvific
work, which can sometimes display itself as 'Only me
and thee are saved, and I am not so sure about
thee'.
[34] This is not only the
case with Isaac and Ishmael, the extent of the
covenant with Noah (all of creation), and with Moses
(those gathered at Sinai) also demonstrates God's
varied relations with different people.
[35] On non-binary approaches
to salvation, see my Barth, Origen, and Universal
Salvation: Restoring Particularity (Oxford: OUP,
2009).
[36] James Dunn's words seem
wise here: 'the old and new covenants should be seen
not so much as two quite different covenants, but as
two interpretations of the first covenant: the
promise to Abraham. … Christianity is not so much an
antithesis to Judaism as the means by which Gentiles
were drawn into Israel (together with Jews) in
fulfilment of Israel's historic mission to the
nations.' James D. G. Dunn, 'Judaism and
Christianity: One Covenant or Two?', in Cartledge and
Mills (eds), Covenant Theology: Contemporary
Approaches (Carlisle: Paternoster, 2001), p.
54.
[37] Nicholas Lash puts it
thus: 'Moses, Jesus, Muhammad: three individuals who
stand, in very different ways, at the particular
beginnings of the stories of Judaism, Christianity
and Islam. Behind all three of them stands
Abraham...' Nicholas Lash, The Beginning and the
End of 'Religion' (Cambridge, CUP, 1996), p.
216.
Title Page | Archive
© 2012, Society for Scriptural
Reasoning
|